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Again, I fail to see where in this thread (or anywhere) it's said we want to "purge" anyone. You're overreacting.
Originally I was on the fence about this. I had been asked to support this from people on both sides, but I wanted to hear from you Roman. I asked for the bill to be delayed to give you a chance to respond. This response you have given was not at all what I expected. I as Speaker, a member of the Security Council, and as a citizen of TNP am disappointed how this devolved.
Since you have tendered your resignation from the Security Council, I want to say thank you for your service in the past and wish you the best for the future. If you continue to participate in TNP, I wish you the best.
I was planning on voting against your recall until you showed up and started going off on bizarre tangents.The problem is that no one wanted to even hear from me on this matter at all, and people made up their mind regardless of anything I have to say, and that is what I find so disappointing.
I don’t think someone is arrogant if they say “I’m going to run for Delegate.”Second, you seem to think it arrogant if someone says they are going to run for Delegate in an election? How very rude of you.
Hi, I’m Prydania. I like to RP and I’ve been very active in TNP over the last year and a half in that arena. Maybe we would have gotten to know each other had you bothered to show up in that time.First of all, you don't even know me by your own admission.
Here are several people calling to hear from Roman on this matter, and withholding judgment until they hear what he has to say:The problem is that no one wanted to even hear from me on this matter at all, and people made up their mind regardless of anything I have to say, and that is what I find so disappointing.
I call for @Romanoffia to address the issue at hand.
Before I offer my thoughts on this matter, I would like to hear from @Romanoffia.
I join the calls for @Romanoffia to speak on this issue and do not think we should progress any further on this whatsoever until he weighs in.
I am withholding my judgement until Roman responds to this matter or a significant amount of time passes in which he does not respond.
I do also support giving him some time to respond to this thread
I echo the opinion of many others in saying that he deserves to be heard, he deserves to have a chance to address our concerns, to explain where he is coming from.
There is no procedure to table a motion as such - postponing continued debate indefinitely. This is the closest we have in the RA rules:As a point of constructive criticism, I will, however, make this point: as Speaker, you made a parliamentary procedural faux pas on your handling of the debate on this matter - you precluded any chance of this measure being objected to on the false grounds that there is no procedure to 'table' the motion. There is indeed a procedure and process for 'tabling' such motions and apparently you are either unaware of that or decided to thwart any attempt at tabling the matter.
To invoke this procedure, we must be in the period in between when the vote is scheduled and the vote begins. It is invoked by saying "I object to the decision of the Speaker to schedule a vote on this proposal" or equivalent. Saying something like "I motion to table this" is not sufficient, since "tabling" is a RL term that is not used in our legislature. The RL definition can also not be relied upon, since it has opposite meanings depending on which side of the Atlantic Ocean you're on. In this matter, the Speaker acted correctly according to the RA Rules and did not deviate from the Standing Procedures.RA Rules:3. If, before a vote on a proposal begins, at least three citizens object to the decision of the Speaker to schedule it, the Speaker must cancel the scheduled vote.
Here is the legal basis for this recall:The point is that there is no legal basis for this recall at all.
For those following along in their pocket Constibillocodes, that's on page 3. There is a full stop at the end of that sentence, not a comma. The Court has repeatedly confirmed that the criteria for recalling someone from office is at the discretion of the Regional Assembly. In other words, if the motion passes, then the reasons for the recall are justified. I won't bother to list the handful of rulings where this concept is referenced. Go to the Court Rulings page and ctrl+f for "recall" if you're interested.TNP Constitution:5. The Regional Assembly may remove a government official from office by a two-thirds majority vote.
As can be seen from the quote from the Constitution I included above, it actually takes a 2/3 majority to recall a government official, not a simple majority.An angry 'mob' could easily conduct a French Style Revolution (metaphorically speaking) with nothing more than a simple majority in the RA.
Roman is correct that there is nothing in our system of laws that prevents government officials being removed by popular will. However, time has shown that recall motions are rare, and usually a result of inactivity or the commission of a crime. They were more common in 2013, when they usually failed. The only successful recall in the last 5 years has been the recall of Deropia last year for completely disappearing as Vice Delegate. You can verify this by typing "recall" into the search bar and checking the box that says "search titles only". But, hypothetically, let's say that by a two-thirds vote of the Regional Assembly, several government officials were removed in quick succession. That would indicate that they had lost the confidence of the citizenry, to which all government power in a democratic region is ultimately subordinate. There would then follow new elections, whereby the people would select different candidates that suited them better. I fail to see the problem.In simple terms, the government of TNP is prone to being picked off, one by one, from any point in the organisational ladder by means of mob-rule 'recalls' and, if something is not done about preventing 'recalls' for arbitrary reasons, someone will eventually try it and actually do it. And when they do it, there will be no basis in TNP Law or Constitution to prevent them from doing, and doing it quite openly.
I believe COE's explanation was very clear. There is a legal basis for this recall (a 2/3 majority is required to recall any government official), so I'm a bit unsure why you keep saying otherwise.Remember, I was the one who was recalled when absolutely no basis for it existed in TNP Law or Constitution
There is no procedure to table a motion as such - postponing continued debate indefinitely. This is the closest we have in the RA rules: To invoke this procedure, we must be in the period in between when the vote is scheduled and the vote begins. It is invoked by saying "I object to the decision of the Speaker to schedule a vote on this proposal" or equivalent. Saying something like "I motion to table this" is not sufficient, since "tabling" is a RL term that is not used in our legislature. The RL definition can also not be relied upon, since it has opposite meanings depending on which side of the Atlantic Ocean you're on. In this matter, the Speaker acted correctly according to the RA Rules and did not deviate from the Standing Procedures.
Yeah I definitely think the Speaker rushed it. I would need to take a check but I don't think Speaker can schedule a vote right after the motion for a vote according to the Standing Procedures unless the Citizens move for a early scheduling.I do have to point out that the Speaker effectively nullified that as a possibility by starting the vote within 10 minutes of the second motion for vote and within 5 minutes of acknowledging the motion and announcing the scheduling. I was still very much on the fence and wanted more discussion and would have used an objection to it being scheduled but literally because I went to the bathroom I was unable too. It also being 10PM EST at the time meant that a large contingent of people on this forum were turning in the night or were already asleep.
I really don't like how that happens it gives me the same bitter taste in my mouth as what happened when the recall for Deropia was immediately opened and even then there was time to object as it was after an override of the objection.
Non-legislative proposals do not have a defined period between the motion for a vote (and its second) and the proposal going to vote. Some Speakers schedule two days out to allow for objections but they are by no means required to, and nothing in the SP recommends they do so.Yeah I definitely think the Speaker rushed it. I would need to take a check but I don't think Speaker can schedule a vote right after the motion for a vote according to the Standing Procedures unless the Citizens move for a early scheduling.
As COE said, "table" has opposite meanings on either side of the Atlantic - it would therefore be a very bad idea for the Speaker to be expected to interpret the meaning of colloquial terms not actually laid out in TNP procedure or law. For the British, a motion to table is a motion to hold a vote, not a motion to end debate and prevent a vote, as the American usage holds. If I motion to table under the British sense, and you second under the American sense... the poor speaker has no reasonable course of action to follow.RA Rule 3 was denied by the Speaker who apparently misunderstood the use of the colloquial term 'table'. That's not the speaker's fault, though, it is the vault of everyone who ignores the intent of a statement expressed in clear terms. At least one person objected by using the term 'table' and was told that it could not be done. Have we gotten to the point that if someone uses a commonly understood term for objecting to a matter that we ignore the intent of the statement?
Since you keep reiterating this point, I feel compelled to ask: In what ways would you say that you have "done your job" as a member of the Security Council? I do not contest that you have met the minimum influence and endorsement requirements, but the data that we have seen indicates that it is the Vice Delegate, not you, who has been primarily doing the work of making sure you continue to meet those requirements. So, aside from logging into your nation enough to keep it from CTEing, and posting on the forum enough to avoid vacating your role on the SC (which I will concede as given), what part of your duties as an SC member have you personally shouldered over the past two and a half years?Remember, I was the one who was recalled when absolutely no basis for it existed in TNP Law or Constitution. I obeyed the rules, did my job to the satisfaction of the requirements and got recalled for doing exactly what I was supposed to do to the letter of the law.
Huh... I thought it was the other way around. I'm American, and I thought to table a proposal means to bring it to a vote. I suppose I have heard it both ways... which only further proves your point.As COE said, "table" has opposite meanings on either side of the Atlantic - it would therefore be a very bad idea for the Speaker to be expected to interpret the meaning of colloquial terms not actually laid out in TNP procedure or law. For the British, a motion to table is a motion to hold a vote, not a motion to end debate and prevent a vote, as the American usage holds. If I motion to table under the British sense, and you second under the American sense... the poor speaker has no reasonable course of action to follow.
You said it right there - I did exactly what I was required to do and met every requirement of activity, endorsement level, etc.,,,. Is that a problem for you?
So... the only thing you can say that you've done over the past 2.5 years is log into your nation at least once every couple of months, and post on the forum at least once every couple of weeks? That's not a terribly compelling argument.
I can't give you credit for your endorsement count when it was somebody else's work that got you those endorsements. Yes, you were in line with the minimum requirements - but you didn't have any part in staying that way.